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Preliminary Charleston 9 NIOSH Report Released
Fri. May 9th 2008

 

Preliminary Charleston 9 NIOSH Report Released
 
............

 

Firehouse.Com News

 

 

CHARLESTON, S.C. -- NIOSH's draft report on the fatal Charleston Sofa Super Store was released late Thursday by Mayor Joe Riley.

The 55-page document does not include recommendations. Those will be part of the final report.

Nine Charleston firefighters were killed June 18 as they attacked a blaze in the furniture store.

Riley pointed out that it was his decision, not NIOSH's to release the preliminary report.

The investigative report follows the same path taken during other fatal probes. Officials look at the fire department, training and equipment as well as documenting what happened at the fire scene. The document contains diagrams, sketches and pictures.

On Tuesday, Riley said he had changed his mind about releasing the report compiled by a panel of national fire service experts. He originally said he was going to hold off until the other probes were completed.

However, after speaking with members of the victims' families, firefighters and others, he decided he will release the report on May 15.

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    Chivalry, Terrorism and Knights in Shinning Armor at Ground Zero by Scott Farrell
    Thu. Jan 24th 2008

    Chivalry, Terrorism
    and Knights in Shining Armor at Ground Zero

    by Scott Farrell
       

     

     
    For more than twenty years, I have been fascinated with the code of chivalry — with stories of knights in armor protecting the weak, championing the innocent and upholding virtuous causes. I enjoy giving talks on the subject, and not long ago I was scheduled to give a presentation on the code of chivalry in one of my favorite venues — an elementry school class. The night before my presentation I had all of my notes togther and I was looking forward to what I hoped would be a very special day. Little did I know it would be a very special day for the whole world.

    The date was September 10, 2001.

    Attack on New York, 9/11Like everyone else on the planet, I couldn’t have imagined how drastically things were about to change. On September 11, I woke not to the cheery sound of the normal morning crew on the radio, but to the somber voices of serious news commentators struggling to convey facts and details amid a dust storm of emotion and confusion.

    By the time I could even switch on the television, I knew everything had been transformed. The school canceled their classes, and for most of the day I sat with my presentation notes in front of me, wondering if all these idealistic words I had written about chivalry and virtue, hope and courage, kindness and courtesy had just been reduced to rubble. Could anyone seriously talk about knights in shining armor in a world where human beings could perpetrate this kind of act on one another?

    Many people who have examined chivalry throughout the years claim that this medieval social and philosophical code, with its reverence of gentle, upstanding behavior, is the ultimate exercise in absurdity. This view is based, in part, on the various cults of chivalry which were products of the neo-Gothic revival of the 18th and 19th centuries. Writers like Tennyson and Walter Scott, and artists like Leighton and Waterhouse put chivalry up on such a pedestal that it became nearly unreachable.

    In the days following September 11, I was haunted, not just by the words and pictures coming from Ground Zero, but also by images of noble knights and gentle damsels — images which had once been romantic and inspiring back in the pre-September 11th world where optimism, prosperity and cheer seemed to be inexhaustible resources. Had I crossed the line between a practical application of chivalry and outright fantasy? I recalled a passage I read in the book The Knight and Chivalry by Dr. Richard Barber, a preeminent scholar on medieval literature and sociology:

    Chivalry had been used for far too long as a mere escape from reality for its ideals to have any relevance to the problems of (post-medieval) society; the themes ... had lost all but the remotest link with everyday life. All that remained of the old high dreams and visions was an empty shell, a pretty relic of the past, fit to while away an idle moment.

    A few days later, when the teacher called to reschedule my chivalry presentation, I apologetically declined. I couldn’t bear to look at those childish, starry-eyed sentiments about chivalric virtues and knights in shining armor, and I certainly didn’t want to put such notions into the heads of impressionable young children under the guise of practical advice.

    But, as everyone who lived through that terrible time in the wake of September 11 knows, hope soon sprouted from the ashes. There were heroic efforts made by police, rescue workers and ordinary citizens to save and assist the survivors of the attack. There was a President, and a government, with the wisdom and grace to fill the skies over the country responsible for the attack with planes dropping food and emergency supplies rather than bombs. There were airline attendants, postal employees, file clerks and legions of other hard-working individuals who had the courage to return to their jobs even though they never dreamed that a war zone could be extended into their workplaces.

    Most of all, there was a nation full of mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, husbands and wives and people of every kind who, in a time of loss, grief and catastrophe, had the strength to overcome a tragedy that, by all rights, should have brought them to their knees.

    During those days, I realized that abandoning the code of chivalry would be an insult to all of those knights in shining armor who gleamed so brightly in the aftermath of September 11.

    Looking at the code of chivalry from the vantage point of liberty and prosperity which we stand upon in the modern world, it’s tempting to dismiss this noble cause as a relic from the romantics and idealists of a bygone day. We must remember, however, that the tenets of knightly behavior were created, not in an age of ease and enlightenment, but amid the brutality and ignorance of the Middle Ages. For the people of the medieval world, grace, courtesy and gentle behavior weren’t dreams and visions to while away idle moments. The code of chivalry and its knightly virtues were the best and only defense against a world which seemed to be overflowing with sorrow, terror and despair. Chivalry was the torch that chased away the darkness which, for a time, seemed as if it might engulf the whole world ...

     

    The Tribute in Light, Six Months After 9/11On the six-month anniversary of the September 11 attacks, the people of New York established a memorial to all that was lost on that day: two shining towers of light, blazing into the night sky, where the World Trade Center had once stood. These brilliant columns of light could be seen 25 miles away from Ground Zero.

    This memorial symbolized a lot of things to a lot of people. For me, it was a reminder that chivalry wasn’t destroyed on September 11, but rather given a new place in the spotlight of life. Those two beacons, glaring fearlessly into the night, were reminders that an act of courage or virtue can shine very brightly in a moment of darkness. This Tribute in Light was an affirmation of everyone who has ever had the resolve to stand by their convictions when the world seemed to be collapsing around them. Perhaps most powerful of all, it was a reminder that we must never lose our faith in the knights in shining armor who stand quietly beside us, each and every day of our lives.

     

    © 2002 Scott Farrell

     


    Chivalry Today

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    © 2002 Scott Farrell




     
    What will come of this?
    Sun. Jan 6th 2008

     

                In memory of nine brothers lost. What will come of this?




     
    I Just Called to Say, I Love you.
    Sun. Jan 6th 2008

    PEGGY NOONAN

    I Just Called to Say I Love You
    The sounds of 9/11, beyond the metallic roar.

    Friday, September 8, 2006 12:01 a.m. EDT

    Everyone remembers the pictures, but I think more and more about the sounds. I always ask people what they heard that day in New York. We've all seen the film and videotape, but the sound equipment of television crews didn't always catch what people have described as the deep metallic roar.

    The other night on TV there was a documentary on the Ironworkers of New York's Local 40, whose members ran to the site when the towers fell. They pitched in on rescue, then stayed for eight months to deconstruct a skyscraper some of them had helped build 35 years before. An ironworker named Jim Gaffney said, "My partner kept telling me the buildings are coming down and I'm saying 'no way.' Then we heard that noise that I will never forget. It was like a creaking and then the next thing you felt the ground rumbling."

    Rudy Giuliani said it was like an earthquake. The actor Jim Caviezel saw the second plane hit the towers on television and what he heard shook him: "A weird, guttural discordant sound," he called it, a sound exactly like lightning. He knew because earlier that year he'd been hit. My son, then a teenager in a high school across the river from the towers, heard the first plane go in at 8:45 a.m. It sounded, he said, like a heavy truck going hard over a big street grate.

     

     

    I think too about the sounds that came from within the buildings and within the planes--the phone calls and messages left on answering machines, all the last things said to whoever was home and picked up the phone. They awe me, those messages.

    Something terrible had happened. Life was reduced to its essentials. Time was short. People said what counted, what mattered. It has been noted that there is no record of anyone calling to say, "I never liked you," or, "You hurt my feelings." No one negotiated past grievances or said, "Vote for Smith." Amazingly --or not--there is no record of anyone damning the terrorists or saying "I hate them."

    No one said anything unneeded, extraneous or small. Crisis is a great editor. When you read the transcripts that have been released over the years it's all so clear.

    Flight 93 flight attendant Ceecee Lyles, 33 years old, in an answering-machine message to her husband: "Please tell my children that I love them very much. I'm sorry, baby. I wish I could see your face again."

    Thirty-one-year-old Melissa Harrington, a California-based trade consultant at a meeting in the towers, called her father to say she loved him. Minutes later she left a message on the answering machine as her new husband slept in their San Francisco home. "Sean, it's me, she said. "I just wanted to let you know I love you."

    Capt. Walter Hynes of the New York Fire Department's Ladder 13 dialed home that morning as his rig left the firehouse at 85th Street and Lexington Avenue. He was on his way downtown, he said in his message, and things were bad. "I don't know if we'll make it out. I want to tell you that I love you and I love the kids."

    Firemen don't become firemen because they're pessimists. Imagine being a guy who feels in his gut he's going to his death, and he calls on the way to say goodbye and make things clear. His widow later told the Associated Press she'd played his message hundreds of times and made copies for their kids. "He was thinking about us in those final moments."

    Elizabeth Rivas saw it that way too. When her husband left for the World Trade Center that morning, she went to a laundromat, where she heard the news. She couldn't reach him by cell and rushed home. He'd called at 9:02 and reached her daughter. The child reported, "He say, mommy, he say he love you no matter what happens, he loves you." He never called again. Mrs. Rivas later said, "He tried to call me. He called me."

    There was the amazing acceptance. I spoke this week with a medical doctor who told me she'd seen many people die, and many "with grace and acceptance." The people on the planes didn't have time to accept, to reflect, to think through; and yet so many showed the kind of grace you see in a hospice.

    Peter Hanson, a passenger on United Airlines Flight 175 called his father. "I think they intend to go to Chicago or someplace and fly into a building," he said. "Don't worry, Dad--if it happens, it will be very fast." On the same flight, Brian Sweeney called his wife, got the answering machine, and told her they'd been hijacked. "Hopefully I'll talk to you again, but if not, have a good life. I know I'll see you again some day."

    There was Tom Burnett's famous call from United Flight 93. "We're all going to die, but three of us are going to do something," he told his wife, Deena. "I love you, honey."

    These were people saying, essentially, In spite of my imminent death, my thoughts are on you, and on love. I asked a psychiatrist the other day for his thoughts, and he said the people on the planes and in the towers were "accepting the inevitable" and taking care of "unfinished business." "At death's door people pass on a responsibility--'Tell Billy I never stopped loving him and forgave him long ago.' 'Take care of Mom.' 'Pray for me, Father. Pray for me, I haven't been very good.' " They address what needs doing.

    This reminded me of that moment when Todd Beamer of United 93 wound up praying on the phone with a woman he'd never met before, a Verizon Airfone supervisor named Lisa Jefferson. She said later that his tone was calm. It seemed as if they were "old friends," she later wrote. They said the Lord's Prayer together. Then he said "Let's roll."

     

     

    This is what I get from the last messages. People are often stronger than they know, bigger, more gallant than they'd guess. And this: We're all lucky to be here today and able to say what deserves saying, and if you say it a lot, it won't make it common and so unheard, but known and absorbed.

    I think the sound of the last messages, of what was said, will live as long in human history, and contain within it as much of human history, as any old metallic roar.







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